Migrant Education Program Gives Farmworkers’ Children A Boost

For nearly a half-century, the federal migrant education program has been helping farmworkers' children catch up and keep up with their peers. We look at one program in the Imperial Valley.

Several hundred teenagers filed into a swanky event center in the Imperial Valley town of Heber on a recent Friday morning. By all accounts, they looked like typical high schoolers — smacking gum and texting away. The vast majority are Latino.

At first glace, this place with waiters in neckties seemed like a strange place to hold a college prep seminar. But it and the surrounding hay fields provided a telling backdrop for these children of migrant farm workers. The message inside: graduate from the fields; go to college.

“I’m the oldest of three, first in my family to graduate from high school, first in my family to get a BA degree, first in my family to get a master's degree, first in my family to have a career and not a job,” Carias told the crowd.

Many students here will boast such firsts, and some will thank the federal Migrant Education Program for helping them succeed.

Edward R. Murrow’s 1960 documentary “Harvest of Shame” shed light on the dismal lives of American farmworkers and the educational hurdles faced by their children. The documentary helped spur the passage of federal legislation to improve opportunities for migrant students.

Today, the Migrant Education Program serves about 345,000 students aged three to 21 — most of them Latino — across the country.

Analee Cine, a junior at Holtville High School, has spent most of her school years traveling back and forth from Hollister, in central California, to the Imperial Valley.

California has, by far, the largest program, serving some 80,000 migrant students. That support includes tutoring and help making up coursework and credits they might miss because their families move around during the school year.

That’s the case for Anali Cine, a junior at Holtville High School.

“You start the year and they teach you something, and then when you move, they teach you something completely different,” Cine said.

Up until recently, Cine would start each school year in Hollister, some eight hours north, and end it in the Imperial Valley. Cine’s mother is a farmworker, but Anali’s path is shaping up to be a much different one.

She wants to attend UC Santa Cruz and become a marine biologist.

Cine’s two older sisters are already working on degrees — one at UC Irvine and the other at a community college.

Diego Lopez, principal of Frank Wright Middle School in nearby Imperial, said migrant parents seem to increasingly prioritize education for their children.

“In the past, for economic reasons, parents would take the kids with them,” he said. “And in many cases, like the case of my wife, they were also part of the labor force.”

California Migrant Student Graduation Rates

All this data, however, isn’t entirely reliable, according to the state’s official watchdog. In a recent report, the California State Auditor’s office criticized the state Department of Education for failing to evaluate the effectiveness of its migrant program, despite a federal requirement to do so.

A spokesman for the education department said an evaluation of the program was being finalized.

Back at the college prep seminar in Heber, many migrant students said they were grateful for the extra boost they were getting from the migrant education program.

“It has been awesome because they call you in, they look over your grades to tell you, ‘OK, you can fix this, go to tutoring,’” Julie Mosqueda, a senior at Central Union High School in El Centro, said.

“And they have helped me a lot with my college applications because they have my transcript all ready, they’re ready for me to go in and apply,” she said.

Mosqueda said she’s applying to three state universities and wants to study kinesiology. Her parents, she said, didn’t even make it to high school.

"So it’s a great motivation that they think I can make something out of myself,” Mosqueda said.

In the short term, Mosqueda plans to seek out, and face, her challenges in the classroom.